Preparatory Encoding of the Fine Scale of Human Spatial Attention

Our attentional focus is constantly shifting: In one moment, our attention may be intently concentrated on a specific spot, whereas in another moment we might spread our attention more broadly. Although much is known about the mechanisms by which we shift our visual attention from place to place, re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cognitive neuroscience 2017-07, Vol.29 (7), p.1302-1310
Hauptverfasser: Voytek, Bradley, Samaha, Jason, Rolle, Camarin E., Greenberg, Zachery, Gill, Navdeep, Porat, Shai, Kader, Tahim, Rahman, Sabahat, Malzyner, Rick, Gazzaley, Adam
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container_end_page 1310
container_issue 7
container_start_page 1302
container_title Journal of cognitive neuroscience
container_volume 29
creator Voytek, Bradley
Samaha, Jason
Rolle, Camarin E.
Greenberg, Zachery
Gill, Navdeep
Porat, Shai
Kader, Tahim
Rahman, Sabahat
Malzyner, Rick
Gazzaley, Adam
description Our attentional focus is constantly shifting: In one moment, our attention may be intently concentrated on a specific spot, whereas in another moment we might spread our attention more broadly. Although much is known about the mechanisms by which we shift our visual attention from place to place, relatively little is known about how we shift the aperture of attention from more narrowly to more broadly focused. Here we introduce a novel attentional distribution task to examine the neural mechanisms underlying this process. In this task, participants are presented with an informative cue that indicates the location of an upcoming target. This cue can be perfectly predictive of the exact target location, or it can indicate—with varying degrees of certainty—approximately where the target might appear. This cue is followed by a preparatory period in which there is nothing on the screen except a central fixation cross. Using scalp EEG, we examined neural activity during this preparatory period. We find that, with decreasing certainty regarding the precise location of the impending target, participant RTs increased whereas target identification accuracy decreased. Additionally, the multivariate pattern of preparatory period visual cortical alpha (8–12 Hz) activity encoded attentional distribution. This alpha encoding was predictive of behavioral accuracy and RT nearly 1 sec later. These results offer insight into the neural mechanisms underlying how we use information to guide our attentional distribution and how that influences behavior.
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subjects Accuracy
Adult
Anticipation, Psychological - physiology
Attention - physiology
Brain
Brain - physiology
Cognition & reasoning
Electroencephalography
Humans
Neurons
Neuropsychological Tests
Reaction Time
Space Perception - physiology
Spatial analysis
Young Adult
title Preparatory Encoding of the Fine Scale of Human Spatial Attention
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